THE MONROE JOEENAI VOLUME XII. NO 32 MONROE, N.C., TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 12 1008 So One Dollar a Year 'I SUFFERED TERRIBLY WITH FEMALE WEAUVCSS." Says Mn. lar M. Miner. DIKE SI ES HOK DIVORCE. James B. Duke. IVtsWent of the American Tobacco Co., Hrmlk in Scandal. Sr Yr W..O.I been living at the San Rcmo, in this city. 1'imn few place in the l"nitJ follow States ha an much inn ami money been iKnt a on the Puke estate, which is almiit two milt from S.iii- As told in the later editions of ersville. X. J. The relate ha J.I yesterday' World, .lame Hochaiian acre tf land in it. and villain and Duke, the millionaire n-sii-iit of jSiH-ient landmarks have been rcmov- the pt-at Tohwo Trust, ami one of (ed to make it one of the h nest estates ( riARKVINU AS A H15INESS. Rascally Men In New York Harry Women Only to Rub ami Desert Them. N- ..rl. The World offers .'' for infor mation leading to the arrest and con vietion of the an-h bigamist. Dr. ieorge A. Witzhoff. by the bn kt rs that mount up largelv. The records show that riagea are often unions hut for a few j days. The husband disipicars and i the disillusioned briile mourns the loss of her life's saving. There is : little sentiment in these alliances, j however, hut nevertheless thedesert ed women suffer. I their profits' INVENTION WORTH fllUJONS. require four tons without it. Think 4.f n,, ,,n!v (J,,ui! awav with the ob- these ni.tr A Vance Count v Man lertectsOne jechoiiable smoke, noxious gases and Husband A ILEA I 0R TIRED WIVES. of the Urea test Mechanical In- grimy st and cinders in railroad vention of the Aft -A Smoke kjeomotives and engines and boilers Consuming Device tor Station- of manufacturing plants 11. the cities,! ary Engine and Railroad 1-U.o- but accomplishing a saving of three-i motives. i fotiitl.s the iiantity and cost of fuel i Hr.ur... i,.f fat the sa'iM' tune. Nor is this all! f.1raTI.H(:..!,Mjv.f ix inform-' With the smoke consumer s ke- Should 5how Them riore Consideration One Hu rturnl Praised by His Mothrr-in-l-a - 1 he Over-lturdened Coun try Women. iiir n.r..l II.. .., ,i UiHlmrk; Your editorial on the invalids, Mi'Sil.tiues Walker and .M oes, awak- the richest men in the I mted Mates, in America, tw all tins Inml a great ti... f,.;iiv for whom dchvtives' 1 . . . i ' . i... 'themselVi action for absolute park has been made Lillian N. Kletcheri landscaiM gardeners mn istmcr .'IkO. Mrs. Either M. Mllner, rxirilt, Ohio, write! f was a terrible tut- ftrcr from lemmlt weakmeaa and the keadacka continually. I wet mot able to 4o way koutework tor my kui head ao4 mytelf. I wrote yoa mot detcrlbea" atycomtltlon at meant pot alkie. I'm recommended Parana. I took tour bottle t am vaa completely tared, f think henna a wonderful mdklne and hart recommended It to mty Irlendt wltk beat retulta. "Mr. & M. Mlloer. Dr. B. B. Ilartmaa, Preeldont ot Th Uutman Saaltarium, haa had orrr flrty years axprriFnoa In the treatment ol fe male catarrhal diieaaea. lie adrlnet Vooifb tree ot chance. If yoa ara suf-h-rlng from any female derangement write him a description of your ymp toma and he will (tire you the benefit ot hia axperlenoe la the treatment of women'a dUeaaea. Mn. Mimlo Oroth, PlattoTllla, Wla.. wrlteat " After suffering for aeTerai jreara with frequent backache and head ache! 1 am antirely without pain of any kind Bow, thanks to Parana." Misa Mamie Qroth. If yon do not derive prompt and satis factory result from theme of I'eruna, writ at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your ease, and ha will be pleased to give yoa bis valuabla ad rise gratia. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The ilartmaa Baultartum. Oolumbua, Ohio. Uallant flare Dies in Harness. Hnf"nl, Conn., liU'h. tih. Tho onning day of the (irand Cireiiit trotting races at historic ChitrUT Oak Park was marked by the tragic death of Sadie Mac, the Canadian trotting queen. She drop Md dead in the fourth heat of the If lO.(Ktl) Charter Oak trot, the classic event of the meet. The black mare, that had won the $5,(X)0 Koger Williams Stakes at Providence, K. I., last Thursday, was the favorite. Three heats were run off and yet Sadie Mac had failed to finish first in any one of them. Just before the beginning of the fourth heat Driver Stinson stepped to the side of tho black mare, sxike to her a minute and then patted her. Those who have read and reread "Mack Ileautv" know that Sadie Mac's toss of tlic head meant "I'll do or die." When the start was made for the fourth heat the game mare went to the front and stayed there until rounding the last turn. Then, hav ing been passed, she made a gallant effort to regain the lead. Kvery muscle and nerve was strained to the utmost. Suddenly she faltered, Her stride became shorter and then she fell dead on the turf. She died try ine to save her laurels. Scores of hardened old horsemen actually wept as they saw the great mare lying dead. Her owner, JIiss Katherino Wilkes, who was in a pri vate box, was deeply affected and left the grounds immediately. When Sadie Mac fell hundreds of men thronged on the track, and when it was announced that the great mare was dead all sorts of rumors spread through the crowd. It was at first thought that she was drugged, but a veterinary surgeons attributed death to a broken blood vessel. Good advice to women. If you want a beautiful complexion, clear skin, bright eyea, red hpa, good health, take Hollister's Kocky Mountain Tea. There Is nothing like it :i" centa, tea or tablets. English Drug Company. The June and July Bulletins of the North Carolina Department of Agriculture, which have recently made their appearance, are publica tions of unusual value to the farm era. The first is "Insect Knemies of Corn," by Entomologist Franklin Sherman. Jr.. and the second, "The Breeds of Swine and Swine Manage ment." bv Dr. Tait Butler. Both are exhaustive, attractive in style. well illustrated, and of such perma nent value as to make it the duty of every farmer to file them away for future reference. If for any reason you are not getting the Bulletin regularly, apply at once for these copies and ask that your name be put on the regular mailing list free of charge for future issues. Ad dress, The Department of Agricul ture, llalciglt. Are You Enured? Engaged people should remember that after marriage many quarrels can be avoided by keeping their digestions in good condition with Electric Bittern. 8. A. Brown of Bennettaville, 8. U, says: "For years my wife suffered intensely from dysivepsia, complicated with a torpid liver, until she lost her atretic th and vigor and became a mere wreck of her former self. Then she tried Electric Bitters, which helped her at once and fin ally made her entirely well. She is now strong and healthy." English Drag Co. sella and guarantee theui at 5oc a bottle. is pressing an divorce against McCredy Duke, after a honeymoon that is hardly ten months old. Frank T. Iluntoon, man aliout town, president and general maiwwr of a popular brand of mineral water known from one end of Droadwav to the otlier, familiar to all the race tracks of the dav and a "first night er" at the theatres, a member of the famous Old (iuard regiment, is named by Duke as co-n'sixmilent. The iwixts were served on Mrs. Duke at the town house of Mr. Duke, Xo. 11 West Sixty eighth street. Sat urday, by a nephew of Richard V Lindabury, of the law firm of Linda bury, Iepue A Folks, with ollices in the Prudential Building, in Newark, who for years have ls-en the Tobacco Trusts attorneys in that State. The pajiers begin by reciting that the plaintiff was married to the de fendant at Camden, X. J., Nov. P.HU, by the Rev. Marshall Owen, pastor (if the Centenary Methodist Church; that ever since such mar riage the contracting parties have lived together as man and wife, and that, within the time Ik tuii u .lulv 1 and Septenilier 1, I '.MS, Mrs. Duke has been unfaithful to l.cr marriage vows with one Frank T. Iluntoon. Specific dates, amounting to six or more, are set up in the complaint, which alleges that the acts complain ed of wen' committed mainly in this city, at No. II West Sixty -eight street, the twn house of the Dukes, and in one or two otlier places, not mentioned 8cifieally, in tho com plaint on Ing Island. Mr. I.indahury said last night: "The acts complained of were committed, Mr. Duke in his com plaint alleges, while he was absent in F.uroiH. lie went to F.uroiie I think almut July 1, ami returned last week. He did not go to No 11 West Sixty-eighth street, but, instead, went to his summer home at Somersville. He has not lived with Mrs. Duke since the date of his departure for Kurot. When he went away there had been no trouble or any thought of any divorce. The relations of Mr. and Mrs. Duke were ierfectly amica ble at the tune of his going abroad, and it was not until his return that the suit was started." Mr. Duke went to F.uroiie for bus iness solely. While he was abroad, it is alleged, certain information reached him by cable involving the names of Iluntoon and Mrs. Duke. It was said that the couple were seen at the races together, that they went automobiling and were together at fashionable restaurants, l'rivate de tectives were called in by Duke through his lawyers in thiscity. The evidence gathered covers the alleged meetings in tho Duko bouse, winch a servant describes, nnd meetings at country place on Long Island. The suit coming so quickly on the heels of the sudden and romantic marriage of Duke and his wife is a great surprise. When the coup'e were married there were not Halt a dozen friends of Mr. Duke knew that he was alxmt to end his long years of bachelorhood. Secretly almost air. Duke and ins secretary left Somervillc, N..I., on the day prior to the marriage, ami went to the Hotel Walton, in Phila delphia. Mrs. McCredy, as she was then, went to the Bellevue-Slrattord in Philadelphia, and the next day went to the home of her uncle, Iwis J. Seal, President of the Consolidated Stock Exchange, in Philadelphia who lives at No. 217 Cooer street, Camden. There tho couple were married, with hardly a dozen of their friends attending tho simple cere mony. Camden was the birthplace of Mrs. Duke. She was Miis W illiam N. Fletcher. Her mother still lives in Camden. After tho wedding Mr. and Mrs. Duke sailed for Eumix on the Baltic and were abroad until February of this year. Then they settled down to live at No. 11 West Sixty -eighth street. The bride is a blonde, with large blue eves. and was formerly the wife of William E. McCredy, a clubman and broker. Sho figured with her first husband in a series of divorce proceedings. In April, 1S!2, her husband and she quarrelled. Her husband declared he did not aprove of her associating with Benjamin Parsons, a fiour merchant, and with Broker Henry Kencr. A young Cu ban was also mentioned as a friend of Mrs. McCredy's. The couple had the An artificial lake that (Mi was built in one corner of great pro'rty. Three hundred men. with sixty h ams, worked for three years to mi i . V. .are everywhere searching, has re- oi trie woria. i.w..r,i,, r..,i,. ,y i,;,,..,,.. Cost 1, . ii.ii1(tt livelihood to a science. It is now an admitted fact than in New York City are many men en gaged systematically in the business of marrving unsuspecting women. The sliatchcns have snrrotindH w it has the privilege of tirst pul-' ",iM ks and chimneys an- di iix. cihhI a long .iriug of tliotiUs and with men whose Sole trade ill life is to marry. The an thoiitic asM-rt that it.holT has figured either as principal or mut ilator in 12.1 bigamous marriage, land that the syndicate of which he was a part numbered at least 27 men prove the estate. I he mansion on ' ,i..u. ... ,i,.., ti. c,.r...r ..f ;ra" "'5 '""."' " the t.roiK-rty cost l..rHlO.Ull. Two i u k., ..i--.Ll n. binR of deluded women. millions more went into the fittings, this condition. It is in this Home mostly that As a result .LoiiHi R Duke has lived of Lite': years. Mr. Duke is about fifty years ! ,, 7iriinst the acencies that aid ,l ' .e!ilillia,tHl tlial in N' Y,,'rk, ! York Cilv, w here he has devoted his old. His wife about thirty-live. ,rimii.;d l,U ll.x-h and WiUhofl for 1 ""'p ,i,n,lary "T WT"'U , time and talents to mechanical m 1 he foundation of the great Duke !. .i,,.,. ; ik. nmtiu jseoundn-ls have victimized at least veutions and improvements. Mr llslillig to the world, in these parts at least, what it regards as one of the i greatest mechanical inventions of the age. It is a smoke consuming device for stationary engines, railpud loco- motives and boilers of all kinds .something inventors have worked for and the world has been wanting 'tv.-r sinre the disi-overv of steam. It is admitted that the Witzhoff ltie mVentor is Mr. L. Bvd syndicate is but one of many oierat- white, formerly of Vance county, i I, it uuiiaic ij uui inic- in limn urx n ni f . virt.n.n.crii.!ulKlf nd throughout the Wes 'but for many years a resident of New Limine is tonacco. vvasiiingioni While skilled d. Uvtivcs are s,ur Duke. the father of James B. Duke.! jnR theenntn- in search of the arch laid the foundation of the present ( bigamist, the Woman's International wealth of his son in the tobacco bus-j w x.aKPi uf this cilv, is forg mess at Durham, X. C . years ago. in wcaK)U8 u, 8lnke at the root of This proierty finally became the ,h( nucieus of the American Tobacco j layers have lieen employed, evi Coinpany. the Tobacco Trust. I ,.(,noe wiU cHw ,,, aua District James B. Dukes fortune is said to AUrn0V j.-rome will be put in -1 between hfty and seventy mil-' ion )t fa0U sullicient for whol." hons. He is the hardest working ,ros,H-utions. millionaire in the world, and usually j stiulent of the situation assert puU in ten hours a day at his bust-(llat ,M.re 8re no t.M ti,ari s.ixm ness . . .i i schatehensor marriage brokers oicr- A brother of James - Dtike,latint nt)W in x,.w York Cilv. In Brodie L Duke, had his share of .. t,e numU-r is l.elieve.1 to matrimonial trouble a year ago, and ; ev,,n .irj!l.r i,je s., Fraiici.sco there is a suit for divorce pending vu. iiri,..,4 i,..lv i,11(.1k of as a result of his sensational mar riage. (lovernmcnt Crop Report. The monthly cotton crop report of the iN-pitrtiiient of Agriculture, issued at noon Tuesday, places the average condition of the crop on August 2th as 72.1, compared with 7t.'.lon July 2.1, IW.1;M.I on August 2.1, ltNlt; XI. 2 on August 2.1, l!ti:t, and the ten years average of 7 t. North Carolina is phtccd at 7(1 and South Carolina at 7.1. tin the strength of the report there wiim a considerable slump in the market. Rheumatism, gout, huckiichc,acid Miison ure results of kidney trouble. Hollister'sRiH-kyMoiiiitaiuTeagcM's directly to the seat of the disease and cun when all else fuils. .'I.l cent. English Drug Company. such agencies. The schatchen, as he is seen in this city, generally lives in a crowd ed tenement district. He usuully has a small shop, but his real busi ness is U) arrange nun ruiges ami . . .-;,..,.,.,r ,...,i;.,..,i ... 1 ' iinuui f ... i.:.. i.i 70o,om jroiu ins tn;iiu ;3,(Ki women. 1 Mrs Charlotte Smith, President of the Woman's International Ri-scue League, said yesterday: "As a result of remrts from our league agents througliout the coun try I am in a (Misiiion to state that there are today in the I'nited StaU-s no less than .Ki.tK XI women who have been married, robls-d and deseited by tliese professional bigamists." Johann Hoch's nvord is well known. Within three years from 1S!I2 he married seventeen women, twelve of whom died soon after mar riage, lie has liccn convicted of the murder of one of his w ives. Appar ently Witzhoff has victimized many more women than I loch. In twenty live marriages he has figured as a principal and in at least one hundred others he has planned the swindle and shared in the profits. It is estimated that in money ami pocket a commission, l nousaiiusoi young women of foreign birth, herd ed in the tenements of the east side, work hard, save their in-unies, and lay their plans for domestic happi ness. If a girl receives no masculine attentions she goes to the schatchen. The first thing he asks is how much money she has saved. She tells him without hesitation. It is this dot that the professional bigamist covets. The schatchen knows it, and his usual bargain is for one per cent, of the bride's little fortune. The charge is small, but so many are the marriages arranged mar- riaues and as much more from the operations of his syndicate. Numerous and Worthless. Everything is in the name when it cornea to Witch Huzi-I Salve. E. C. DeWitt & Co. of Chicago discovered some years ago how to make a salve from witch hael that is a specific for piles. For blind, lilcedini;, iU liinK and protrudinc piles, rcpnu, cuts, hums, bruise aud all skin diseases IV Witt's Salve has no equal. This has giveu rise to numerous worthless counter leils. Ask for DeWilt's- the ueiiuine. Sold by English DriiKCo.andS.j. Welsh. improvements. White is a practical machinist with an inventive turn of mind, anil has contributed in no small degree to the valuable inventions of the mechani cal world. His chief aim and ambition has been to discover some means of get ting rid of the smoke in engine and boilers. To the H-rfectioii of a smoke consuming device he has given years of thought and study and made all sorts of exiK-riments. About a year ago Mr. White prac tically perfected his invention. But he was not yet ready to proclaim his triumph to the world. There were some minor dtthcultics to overcome. This lie has done and the thing is a demonstrated success tested to the entire satisfaction ol himselt and others. Mr. White has his invention in operation at Andrews, m t herokee county, this State, on the boilers of a large manufacturing plant. One good thing about it is that the smoke consumer can be applied to engines, lioilcrs and locomotives already in use. It is not necessary to have them made with it. Mr. White's invention is more than a smoke consumer, it is a great fuel saver as well. It is claimed that in burning tin smoke a saving of three-fourths of the coal is gained. There is more strength and heating Kwer in the smoke land gas than there is in the coal and almiler fitted with this device will do the same work with one ton of coal that would Deafness Cannot be Cured by local applications, aa they cannot reach the diseased portion ol the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness and that ia by constitutional remedies Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube aeta inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it i entirely closed deafueaa ia the re sult, aud unless the inflammation can b taken out and this tuna restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever: nine cases out of leu are caused bv catarrh, which nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. Wa will give One Hundred Dollars for ny case of Dealnesa (caused by catarrbythat cannot be cured by Hall's Catanh Cars Send tor rirculais, tree. K.J.CHENKY 4 OO, Toi.hoo. Ohio. Take Hall's Family pills lor constipation. Everybody is Invited To Come and See the NeAv Dry Goods. Everything in this line you can think of. Your Winter Clothing. Any color, style, size or price Suit or Overcoat you want we have it. Come and see. AS FOR SHOES, We can give you everything you want at a bar gain price. All sizes and kinds. You can save money by seeing our stock. Ev erything to wear for men, women and children at the Lowest Price. People's Dry Goods Co, .it-.? with ami a great saving is th ctd ill the eosl of electing all J maintain llig these. If the news that comes to us is straight, and we have no reason to doubt it, Mr White's invention is certainly one of the grettet inven tions of the age: "there's millions in it" We are informed that Colonel A H. Andrews, vice president of the Smthern llailway, will have a num ber of locomotives llou being built at the Richmond Icotnotive W orks, equipped with the White smoke con sumer and IlieSiuthern will thus U the tirst railroad to adopt its use. Mr. White has refused $PKI,IHKI for his interest in his invention. A company has been incorKirated with a 2.l),tlilil capital to manufacture and sell the White smoke consumer and the public will welcome its early adoption on every railroad and en gine and boiler in the land. L Hoyd While is a son of our venerable and esteemed countyman. Captain W. W. White. of Knterprise, and brother of Mr. Wallace White, of Henderson. He has many ac quaintances and relatives in Vance county who will learn with interest and pleasure that he has "struck it rich" and is destined to contribute so largely to the sum total of human happiness and the economy of the industrial world. a.m uiaaiiniii fTr-i-e-l n iii i mmi-im im an mnir" Bring kermit Along. N-w ami 0!Mrver. When the I'lesideiit visit Ualeigli next month, we hope he will bring his son, Kermit, with him. In a sleeping car the other day the Presi dent s son surrendered his lower berth hi an aged gentleman and his wife who would have had dilhenlty in reaching an upper iierui winch the book took. It was a simple act of courtesy indicating what we call good raising" There are plenty of well-trained bovs who would have done the same tiling, but in an age w hen chivalry is ridiculed and "devil take the hindmost" the motto with manv men and bovs, the thocglitfiil courtesy has been widely commented upon. It shows that wing the son of the President has not turned llic head of the boy and that he slums the same consideration for age that all right thinking parent try to in still in their sous. Really the thing that has won for Mr Roosevelt so much of popular regard in his ideal home life, typical of the simple and happy home life that makes America great. In spite, however, of good instruc tion at home, too many boys are lack ing in the courtesies and gentler amenities of life, and we lind too many boorish men in the world Some writers have gravely asked, in view of the decadence of old time chivalry, if, as a nation, we are losing the good manner of the past genera tion. It is because of this loss of courtesy that the act of Kermit Roosevelt has been so widely ap plauded. I'sing it as a text the Baltimore Sun makes tliese sensible observations: "Nowhere else are bad manners more conspicuous and common than on the railroad cars. In entering the car there is usually a rush to secure the best place, and in that rush the aged, the infirm, women and children are apt to be elbowed aside. Women are generally as in considerate of the rights and com forts of others as the men, and there a general disixisition to let the devil take the hindmost. One of the cowboys from the far West who came the inauguration ol I'resuient Rixisevelt last spring was amazed to see men dressed up as gentlemen lingering over their cigars bik! wine in the dining car between Washing ton and New York while a long line of ladies were standing and waiting for their places. Our cowboy friend called these men "sheep faces, hich seems to indicate that they ex cited his contempt, and he could not understand how people guilty of such behavior have tho effrontery to boast of lietter manners than those of the cowlmys who treat their wom- jii with difference. "Kermit Roosevelt in being polite while traveling set a good example of unselfishness to other travelers, and it is to bo hoped that other Americans, young and old, will find some proht in it. Raleigh hereby invites Kermit U accompany his father to Raleigh on October lath, as the guest ol the city. Three Juror Cured of cholera morbus with one small bot tle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. Mr.G.W.Fowlei of HiKhtow.r, Ala., relate an eiperi ence be had while serving on a petit jury in a murder case at Edwardsville, county seat ol Clebourne county, Ala. He lays: "While there I ate some fresh meat and aome souse meat and it gave me cholera morbus in a very severe form, 1 wai never more sick in my Ufa and sent to the drug store foi a certain cholera misture but the drug gist sent me a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Kemedy instead, saying that b bad what I aent for, but that thia medicine was so much batter b would rather aend it to ma in the 6i 1 was in. I took one dose of it and was better in five minutes Tba second dose enred ma entirely Two fellow juror were afflicted in the same manner and ona smsll bottle cured the three of os." For al bv C. N. Simpson, Jr., and S. j. Welsh. reminded me that I could lei I vou I have a cohmii who has la-en eolililu-d to In-1, utialile to walk, for over ID years, and her hiiUuid's kindness is wonderful -for a man. His nioth-er-in law just think of it even saj and s! lived ilh them - that she never sa such kindness shown any one. She s.os her daughter had grown v ry childish and hard to plea.se, yet her husband never gave her an unkind word; would even come from the field at any hour to give Iw r a spoonful of medicine, to please her, when some one elsecoiild have done it just as well. This mother-in law wonderful to relate!) said lie was just too good to his wife humored her loo much. This Mr. Waikt r your correspondent w rites of must Is- just one more man like this one. Strange to say how different men are from women. All good won, en, win n their Inisliaiids are sick, never tin- of waiting on them, on and on for years. Vet very few men want to even stay ill the house hen the v. ife is sick. They act like they're glad when the lamr, tired hands, that had waited on them and their children for years, were still. Now that the wife is atllicted and can do no more she is no longer wanted, but husband is thinking o' wife No. -2. One question I want to ask you, Mr. I'.ditor ias you answer so many): io you lielicve there is a man in the world who would lie willing to take a woman s place.' .nay be a tew; not many. Kdilor.) Her endless cares; the same old three meals, and dishes to wash every day, no matter how manv other can s, such as milk to see to, churn, make beds, sweep and lust, fruit to can and preserves, jel lies and pickles to make, washing and ironing, yard and (lowers, house keeping generally, meeting company. sewing ami darning an endless hain of duties. hat if a man had part of tins to do in one day some times and then had a cross husband to come in and complain, with never ;i kind word or look to cheer her on her wearv road. Husband, don't lie so chary of kind words to your tired wife lend her a hand; tell her her cooking is good, even better than your mother's used to be; tell her the silver threads are prettier to you than the gold ones in her young days. If people could onlv realize how encouraging words lighten the burden they would not use them so grudgingly. If the good man would only praise the tired wife sometimes, how much lighter the burden would seem, since it is alnioxt impossible to have hired help. Hut mothers, we must learn our girls to take more of the burdens. Now, 1 do not say all women have as much as this to do. Some of them dress and are on the street a lot. But the most of us have all of these cares to contend with and nearly all the sisters in the country have all these cares. Some of them go on day in and day out, for months and years, just this "sameness" of cares, never taking a day oil for rest, while the good man iK-cassionally dresses up and goes hi town to court, or is on the jury, or goes on an excursion, r to a big speaking, or something, md never says: "Wife, arrange and xmio w ith me." No wonder so many more tired wives and mothers lose their minds in the country than in the town. It is the "sameness", so I heard a learned person say. Hut there are many women in town, sis ters of the country, who work jusi as hard as you. Some have to start husbands by the 5 or li o'clcvk whis tles in the morning. If not on time they are docked. You don't have meals just by the exact hour. Now, husbands, all you that read this, if the cap doesn't tit don't wear it. Those it does lit, do alniut, turn around and praise your wife a littlo more; bring the smile back to the tired face and make her life just as happy as yon promised when you stood by her 20 or .10 years ago. 1 IRKI) IUNIIS. SUtesville, X. C. Aug. 2ti, l'.0.r). FIFTY CENTS IN some conditions the Cain from the use of Scott's Emuliion is very rapid. For this reason we put up a Hfty-cent size, which is enough for an ordinary cough or cold or useful as a trial for babies and children. In other condition the gain is slower health cannot be built up in a day. In such case .Scott's Emulsion must be taken as nourishment!" a food rather than a medicine. It's a food for tired and weak digestions. 9nl tot In umtt Scott ABowne, isp-h.